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View From Here: Don't Blame the Young People

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Positive male mentoring programs, such as this computer lab, would be cut by the city.

The saying is that the youth are future, and if that is so then our future is grim. Because what we are allowing to happen to our young people is little short of genocide. They are being demonized, short-funded, poorly educated, unfathered, unenriched and left to have their training in life come from the streets. And they are pummeled and blamed for being the cause of the mayhem that is being perpetrated on them.

 

One example was in a recent Daily News Op Ed, where Police Commissioner Ray Kelly gave a class in how statistics can be made to tell a perfectly reasonable lie.

 

He shows with detailed numbers how stop-and-frisk has taken away guns and prevented gun deaths, but he is oblivious to the understanding that he has removed the guns but not the rage of a dream that can never be, a rage that continues to express itself in domestic violence and antisocial behavior.

 

What else could be expected from education and social systems that deliver a 50% dropout rate and when the schools do work, they graduate too many students unprepared for the world in general and certainly unprepared for what Brooklyn has become: a magnet for the most ambitious, aggressive and creative people from around the planet, and this is the competition they have to face in an environment of systemic racism and from a position of poverty.

 

Parents whose only source of income is the EBT card, have little or no cash to control and this does not help when raising children in this consumer-driven society. And because of the lack of enriching places for development, and the lack of jobs, businesses and careers to look forward to, the streets lead their children elsewhere, to the underground cash economy.

 

And as a result, Joseph Williams from the Christian Association for Prison Aftercare, writes, “I would say that in this country it would be hard to argue that there is not a relationship between crime and poverty. Poor people make up the overwhelming majority of those behind bars as 53% of those in prison earned less than $10,000 per year before incarceration.”

 

And when you’re in a neighborhood with demographics at 25-50%+ unemployment, it is not surprising that there is an increase in robberies and violence. There used to be a saying in the black community that the really smart people were in jail. Anecdotes like that ring true, because creative, ambitious and aggressive young people, who would be forming companies and creating value in the community given an opportunity, go into the omnipresent drug business at a level where they are easily arrested, labeled and sentenced to a life of a third-class citizen, a person with “a record.”

 

And yet we all know that whatever violence happens the city will spend whatever is needed to “bring the situation under control.” More police watchtowers, helicopters and mobile command and mounted units will be brought in to “restore order” but I don’t think anyone should feel any safer.

 

If we want to have a chance at a safe and productive summer, there should be a clamorous roar from across the city that job programs be a first priority and that these centers remain open and given staffing for expanded hours and programming. We have to save these generations.

13-Year-Olds Targeted for Shooting Range Day Trips

Mothers, be very aware. As day bus trip season ramps up, someone got the bright idea to advertise Shooting Range out-of-state day trips for 13-year-olds. A full-color glossy poster promoting the Shooting Range trips was recently found on a tree near the intersection of Livonia and Rockaway Avenues.

 

The 11″-by-18″ glossy depicts several pictures of an adult Black male aiming AK47 and AR15 assault rifles. Specifically stating an age requirement of “13 & up”, prices are “Young Teens: $35” and “Adults: $50.” A “Firearms Rental” fee is “$6 to $13.” ID is required.

 

Ironically, the phrase “We Do Not Promote Gun Violence; We Promote Knowledge & Family Protection” is printed in red ink with the name of a local rapper who is identified on the poster as “Chief of Arms.”

 

The poster depicts the name of a gun club, a contact number and a website.

 

An inquiry found the day trips are to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where guns and gun training are legal. NYC has gun ranges, but someone must have a gun license in order to use them.

 

“This makes no sense,” said community activist Tony Herbert. “Why are you telling a 13-year-old you will take them from Brownsville to learn how to shoot an AK47?” Herbert said “the children would come back with an appetite, because once they know how to shoot, they will want to shoot. They are going to want a gun.”

 

“You are sending the wrong message to a teen,” Herbert said. “If this was catered to an adult, a responsible adult, it would be a totally different thing. This is irresponsible, at best. Clearly, these are assault rifles. These are not hand guns. What is the point of teaching a 13-year-old how to shoot an AK47?”

 

The bottom line for Herbert is “They need to re-think this, and restrict the age at which kids are allowed to do this.”

 

With years of experience mediating violence, Herbert said, “Considering the amount of gun violence taking place in central Brooklyn – Brownsville, East New York, East Flatbush, and Bed Stuy – to take young people out of our community to learn to shoot assault weapons for whatever purpose is irresponsible. This practice has to be stopped immediately. As a responsible adult, I feel this should not be allowed. There should be some legislative answer to this in order to provide kids with better opportunities so they don’t have to find themselves going into another state where they can actually get access to a gun and bring it back because they have had an urge and opportunity to shoot. Unless they are going into the military, what is the need to teach a kid to shoot an AK47? There is none.”

 

Herbert lamented, “Unfortunately, it won’t be the people they are trying to hit that will get killed. It will be some innocent mother, grandmother, kid, or woman who happens to be out grocery shopping who would get hit be a bullet. It might be a grandmother sitting in her apartment watching TV only to catch a bullet and get killed. High power weapons shoot through brick.”

 

Herbert added, “This would create home-grown terrorists going around shooting in our community. The last thing we need is a war between people in the community and the Police Dept.”

 

According to the website printed on the poster, the organizer is a rapper/activist who is using videos to recruit young people. Apparently, in January 2012 the organizer decided to form a gun club. NYPD cannot do anything about the Shooting Range day trips because they are not breaking the law. So far.

 

This process of recruiting teens to use assault weapons reminded Herbert of African warlords like Charles Taylor or Joseph Kony who armed children in Sierra Leone, Uganda, and the Central African Republic. “Here you are creating a soldier,” Herbert said. “What happens when the soldier is not mentally prepared to deal with the issues and concerns and misconstrues the information being passed on to them? How do we control that so another innocent life isn’t killed like Zurana Horton?”

 

Herbert issued an open plea. “My request would be to exclude young people from participating in the gun club,” he said. “I don’t think teenagers are well-equipped mentally how to progress and grow in our communities when the only thing they know how to do is shoot a gun.”

“Save Our Child Care” Demonstration & Announce Labor Rally at City Hall Thursday, May 31

Save Bay Ridge Child Care is the plea from these young people carrying petitions to the mayor. (Find more at www.laborpress.org)

NEW YORK, NY – A delegation of young children delivered more than 5,000 letters and petitions to Mayor Michael Bloomberg today, on behalf of 47,000 low income and working class children scheduled to be booted out of the city’s subsidized child care and Head Start programs in coming months.

The controversial cutbacks are part of the Mayor’s proposed city budget for the new fiscal year beginning July 1. His plan is being hotly debated by City Council as it considers the Mayor’s budget proposal over the next five weeks.

“Our children, families and communities will suffer an impact that will be devastating in both the short and long term,” says a petition signed by parents and friends of the city’s Head Start programs.

“My child is being threatened by your Early Learn NYC program,” says a letter. “Your administration needs to rethink its plan.”

Early Learn NYC is the name of the Mayor’s troubled plan to reorganize the delivery of child care services. More than 100 child care and Head Start centers are scheduled to be shut down in just the first year of Early Learn, resulting in a net loss of more than 9,000 available slots for children.

More than 2,000 unionized child care and Head Start workers – who earn an average salary of just $28,000 per year – would also lose their jobs.

“This is a bad deal for thousands of struggling families, a bad deal for dedicated, low paid workers and ultimately a bad deal for all the people of New York,” commented Luz Santiago, Associate Director of AFSCME District Council 1707, which represents many of the city’s child care and Head Start employees.

Labor unions from across the city and state are planning a large rally at City Hall on Thursday, May 31. (www.laborpress.org)

Interfaith Hospital advocates worry medical center is closing

 

By Amelia Rawlins

 

“This is going to hurt us all!,” exclaimed an outraged Bedford-Stuyvesant resident during Wednesday night’s Community Alert Town Hall Meeting at Boys and Girls High School.

 

This concerned resident was among 60 others who attended the meeting to discuss the possible closing and merger of Interfaith Medical Center.

 

The community hospital, which is located at 1545 Atlantic Avenue, services over 250,000 patients a year in the Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights area, and if closed, would be detrimental to its workers, patients and institutions in the area.

 

“As a resident, it will hurt our neighbors, our children and our grandchildren. They all depend on Interfaith,” said resident and five-year Interfaith Hospital worker Patricia Nelson. “I am happy about what is happening tonight. This is what the community needs – to rally to keep these hospitals open because big investors are just coming into the community and wiping out the black community and it is wrong.”

 

The plan to merge the hospital is a result of The Berger Commission, founded by the chairman of a private investment firm, Stephen Berger. According to previous reports, recommendations for the plan include Interfaith merging with Brooklyn Hospital and the Wyckoff Heights Medical Center, and for Brooklyn Hospital to be the lead facility.

 

According to Interfaith Medical Center CEO Luis Hernandez, between 2005-2010, Interfaith experienced the “golden years” and at one point they even had approximately $72 million in the bank. Changes then came about in reimbursement and the hospital went from an average of $18,000 to $8,800 dollars, Hernandez said.

 

“In 2011, we lost approximately 21 million, so a lot of this has to do with the significant change in the rates that we are receiving. Our rates were significantly cut and were no longer able to meet our expenses,” Hernandez said.

 

During a panel discussion at the meeting, community officials and elects voiced their opinions and ideas of what needs to take place, starting now, to change the merge decision. Panelists included CEO Luis Hernandez, Board of Trustee member Al Wiltshire, Chief Operating Officer Patrick Sullivan and President and Chairman of Scudder’s InfoTech Security Foundation, Inc. Brett Scudder.

 

“This issue of closing our hospitals is about business,” said Scudder. “Each one of you have a tag on your head saying how much you are worth.”

 

These harsh realities were proven to Scudder when his hospital, Peninsula Hospital Center, located in Queens, New York, was permanently closed after 104 years of service on April 9, 2012.

 

“This situation is very similar to what happened at Peninsula. So, rather than bickering and pointing fingers, quickly we need to be on the ball and unite as one community,” he said.

 

Knowing the truth of what this situation is really about is not merely enough to rectify the decision as people are eager for answers and solutions to keep the neighboring hospital where it is and the way it is.

 

“In order for us to save Interfaith, this is a start tonight, but we’ve got to fill every seat in this room,” Al Wiltshire said. “We need to consider a bus ride up to Albany—several buses so we could raise hell up there and let them know that we are serious about keeping our hospital open. All they understand in Albany is numbers. We need this hospital. If this is not here where will we go?”

 

Wiltshire’s question is one that was obviously shared by many in the audience as they fear that if Interfaith merges, it will be tremendously difficult to receive health care that is less than 30 minutes away, as many elderly cannot commute that far and others just don’t have the means to do so.

 

“It takes about an hour by car to get down to Brooklyn Hospital. Wyckoff Hospital can take you about 25 minutes to an hour; and what happens if you don’t have a car? You miss the 25 [bus] here, you have to wait 20 minutes for another one,” Wiltshire said.

 

Hernandez said at this point the ultimate fate of Interfaith remains unclear.

 

“At this time we are working with Brooklyn Hospital to see how we are going to be a part of their system; a survey will be conducted over the next 15-20 weeks and at the end of that time we will determine which direction we are going to go,” he said.

 

As summer approaches, trouble brews at Armstrong Houses

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Take rooftop shooters taking potshots at police. Add in young men of color hanging out on the street begging for jobs and opportunities to sell legitimate business ideas. Then factor in the mayor wanting to close the only open community center that serves hundreds of kids – and you get the dire straits of the Louis Armstrong Public Housing complex.

 

Now add a jump in neighborhood crime, a police change of command at the local precinct and the coming summer when area youth are out of school with no jobs, and it appears parts of Bedford-Stuyvesant is nearing a crisis point.

 

“Things are getting real bad on Lexington Avenue,” said one police source of the rooftop shootings occurring in the heart of the Armstrong Houses just two blocks from the 79th   Precinct the Louis Armstrong Houses is comprised of two developments in close proximity – Armstrong I and Armstrong II. Together, they make up 15 buildings, 617 apartments and about 2,150 residents.

Police sources say late last week gunmen allegedly took about 10 shots from the roof of 370 and 380 Lexington at the police van and NYPD Sky-Cam that have been stationed in front of the buildings for several months.

But local residents on the street say the NYPD was just caught in the crossfire between warring rivals and the shots weren’t fired at them.

“The cops don’t do nothing out here,” said one of several young men dressed in red colors standing near the Sky-Cam in the Armstrong Houses. “They’d rather stop old people outside or lock up people on minor excuses.”

Upon further questioning, two of the young men asked earnestly if they knew of any job opportunities. One young man said he had a clothing design line and asked this reporter if he could help him promote his business.

Meanwhile, Mayor Bloomberg is proposing to close the Police Athletic League (PAL) Children’s Community Center, (495 Gates Avenue) that serves mainly the Armstrong Houses.

The center is filled to near-capacity after school every day and its annual day summer camp programs are filled to capacity. Under Bloomberg’s proposed budget he will cut the center’s Out of School Time award and the PAL Center will be forced to close.

“They’re putting up more (police) cameras while the children in the area are going to suffer,” said Danielle Lynch, the PAL Center’s director.

Lynch and other neighborhood leaders such as 79thPolice Precinct Community Council President Dr. Kim Best are currently circulating petitions to keep the center open. The closure follows an Our Time Press story three weeks ago that found the Armstrong Houses’ other community center, The Grace Havenwaller Learning Center, has been unable to pass a kitchen health or safety inspection for several years.

Neither the Bloomberg Administration nor local City Councilman Al Vann returned calls at press time.

The problems at the Armstrong Houses continue as the 79th   Police Precinct, which covers the area, abruptly replaced their commanding officer, Deputy Inspector Peter Bartoszek with Deputy Inspector Michael LiPetri last week.LiPetri comes from running the 101stPrecinct in Far Rockaway.

The new head of the precinct comes as robbery is up nearly 42 percent for the year and overall felony crime is up nearly 18 percent.

Best said she knows LiPetri and he is a good cop, but she also warned that crime is getting much more out of hand.

“They’re robbing bodegas in the middle of the day now,” she said. “People are getting desperate.”